Last week, the pop star shamed a fan who was filming her concert with a camera mounted on a tripod. In the clip (taken by another concertgoer), Adele stops the show to address the fan: "Could you stop filming me with that video camera? Because I'm really here in real life, you can enjoy it in real life rather than through your camera."

Headlines celebrated Adele for scolding the fan. It appeared to be a moment of clarity — a beloved artist helping all of us reflect on our compulsion to record everything.

But here's the rub. In the clip, you can visibly see hundreds of other fans with their smartphones out, also recording.

So what makes the tripod-wielding fan Public Enemy No. 1?

What about the hundreds of other concertgoers Snapchatting every moment, sending out Instagrams and tweets and even an occasional Facebook status update? They're in the clear?

OK, fine. But attach a mini tripod to that phone and you'll be rolling in the deep.

Benjamin Wash had a long history of drug addiction and had tried to kill himself at least once before he was booked into the Riverside Regional Jail in Virginia on Nov. 28, 2017. But somehow, he was able to hang himself with a bedsheet two days after he was detained.

The four-year contract between General Motors and the United Auto Workers expired Saturday, but workers were told to report to their jobs as negotiations on a new deal continued and the prospect of a national strike loomed.

When the Census Bureau reported an increase in the number of people without health insurance in America, it sent political partisans reaching for talking points on the Obama-era health law and its travails. But the new numbers suggest that fears of the Trump administration's immigration crackdown may be a more significant factor in the slippage.